Staba Richard J, Wilson Charles L, Bragin Anatol, Fried Itzhak, Engel Jerome
Department of Neurobiology, David Greffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA.
J Neurosci. 2002 Jul 1;22(13):5694-704. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-13-05694.2002.
Animal models of epilepsy have shown that synchronous burst firing is associated with epileptogenesis, yet the evidence from human studies linking neuronal synchrony and burst firing to epileptogenesis remains equivocal. Sleep-wake states have been shown to differentially modulate the generation of epileptiform EEG spikes between brain regions of greater and lesser seizure-generating potential, providing information that helps to identify the primary epileptogenic region. Using these state-dependent mechanisms to assist us in identifying neuronal correlates of human epilepsy, we recorded interictal neuronal activity from mesial temporal lobe (MTL) areas in epileptic patients implanted with depth electrodes required for medical diagnosis during polysomnographically defined sleep-wake states. Results show that single neurons recorded ipsilateral to seizure-initiating MTL ("epileptic") areas had significantly higher firing rates (p = 0.01) and burst propensity (p = 0.01) and greater synchrony of discharges (p = 0.003) compared with neurons recorded from contralateral non-seizure-generating MTL ("non-epileptic") areas. In particular, during episodes of slow wave sleep (SWS) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, epileptic hippocampal neurons had significantly higher burst rates compared with non-epileptic hippocampal neurons (both p = 0.01). In contrast, during episodes of wakefulness (Aw), no difference in burst firing between epileptic and non-epileptic hippocampal neurons was observed. Furthermore, synchronous firing was significantly higher between epileptic MTL neurons compared with non-epileptic MTL neurons during SWS (p = 0.04) and REM sleep (p = 0.02), but no difference in neuronal synchrony was found between epileptic and non-epileptic neurons during Aw. These results provide evidence that sleep states differentially modulate abnormal epileptogenic neuronal discharge properties within human MTL and confirm that neuronal burst firing and enhanced neuronal synchrony observed in experimental animal models of epilepsy characterizes human epilepsy as well.
癫痫动物模型已表明同步爆发式放电与癫痫发生有关,但来自人体研究的将神经元同步性和爆发式放电与癫痫发生联系起来的证据仍不明确。睡眠-觉醒状态已被证明能以不同方式调节癫痫发作可能性较大和较小的脑区之间癫痫样脑电图尖峰的产生,这为识别原发性致痫区域提供了有用信息。利用这些状态依赖机制来帮助我们识别人类癫痫的神经元相关因素,我们在多导睡眠图定义的睡眠-觉醒状态下,从植入了用于医学诊断的深度电极的癫痫患者的内侧颞叶(MTL)区域记录了发作间期神经元活动。结果显示,与从对侧非癫痫发作的MTL(“非癫痫性”)区域记录的神经元相比,在癫痫发作起始的MTL(“癫痫性”)区域同侧记录的单个神经元具有显著更高的放电率(p = 0.01)和爆发倾向(p = 0.01)以及更大的放电同步性(p = 0.003)。特别是,在慢波睡眠(SWS)和快速眼动(REM)睡眠期间,癫痫性海马神经元的爆发率显著高于非癫痫性海马神经元(两者p = 0.01)。相比之下,在清醒(Aw)期间,未观察到癫痫性和非癫痫性海马神经元之间爆发式放电的差异。此外,在SWS(p = 0.04)和REM睡眠期间,癫痫性MTL神经元之间的同步放电显著高于非癫痫性MTL神经元,但在Aw期间癫痫性和非癫痫性神经元之间未发现神经元同步性差异。这些结果提供了证据,表明睡眠状态以不同方式调节人类MTL内异常的致痫神经元放电特性,并证实了在癫痫实验动物模型中观察到的神经元爆发式放电和增强的神经元同步性也是人类癫痫的特征。